Dr. Manette In A Tale Of Two Cities

Words: 985
Pages: 4

Often times when people suffer it feels like it is all for nothing and they let this despair consume them until they have become nothing but a memory of their suffering instead of the person they were before. Dr. Manette suffered eighteen long years in the Bastille for doing what he thought was right. He came out only to discover his wife dead and his daughter a grown woman. When he was liberated he was broken, they had done much damage to the once strong doctor in the prison. His fight against the men who put him in prison was fought within himself. He needed to come back to reality and prove to himself that he was not the man who they had destroyed in prison. Dr. Manette is lucky enough be graced with the love and support of his daughter …show more content…
Her love and support helps her father to maintain his sanity. She is able to revive the life in him and together they spend many days with each others comfort. Unfortunately not all days can be perfect. Lucie comes home one day to discover a soft tapping coming from her father’s room and knows immediately that he is making shoes. “Her uncertainty lasted but a moment; she hurried back, and tapped at his door, and softly called to him. The noise ceased at the sound of her voice, and he presently came out to her, and they walked up and down together for a long time.” (chapter 10). Dr. Manette’s dependence on Lucie is that of a child to its mother. He is lost without out her and resorts to the only thing he knows when she is gone; making shoes. His monster is within him and threatens to consume him at any moment and Lucie understands that and knows that she must be patient with her father. The moment she calls out him he recognizes her voice and knowing there is love on the other side of the door brings him out of his trance. She often will pace back in forth in the room with her father to calm him down and she is glad to do so if it means that it helps her